David Hart’s Spring gent is a traveler in Cuba. Or, at least, he’s a traveler in Cuba in spirit. The designer had been planning to visit the island, but the trip never occurred. Nonetheless, he channeled the panache of Habana Vieja, mixing a quiet mid-century swagger (something Hart is great at) with a lighter, broader sense of contemporariness.

There were: striped blazers, buttoned high, over Huaraches made with Toms; neck scarves worn sash-like; pocket squares and Panama hats; banana prints; and knitted polos. The most memorable piece was a pink Guayabera—it touched both sides of the Straits of Florida as something distinctly Cuban, but reinterpreted through international hands. Hart also had some women’s looks in his roster—high-waist pants styled with little tied-off shirts. Easy. Breezy. Stroll-on-the-Malecón ready.

If there’s a criticism, it’s that Hart’s inspiration and subsequent interpretation was mainly superficial (a lot of the boys carried cigars, for example); perhaps when that visit does happen, and who knows what’s going to go down with President Trump’s pull-back on the prior administration’s Cuba policy, Hart will find more to explore. Worth mentioning, though: All of his models today came from Anti, a new group founded by employees who left Trump’s modeling agency.